Cookbooks Written by Female Chefs
In honor of Women鈥檚 History Month, get librarian Rose Kernochan's cookbook recommendations
ICE New York's resident culinary librarian, Rose Kernochan, weighs in on her top recommendations for cookbooks, memoirs and behind-the-scenes tell-alls.
Women in the kitchen is not a new phenomenon. In fact, you鈥檒l find interviews with chefs across the world, in all types of cuisine and at all levels of sophistication stating they learned to cook from their mother, their grandmother or their auntie.
We asked ICE New York鈥檚 head librarian Rose Kernochan to recommend what she considers essential reading for Women鈥檚 History Month. Below you鈥檒l find her top picks of cookbooks, memoirs and compiled interviews by and about the women who shape kitchens near and far, whether that鈥檚 the grandmothers of Africa or chef-owners right here in the US.
Read on to get inspiration from some of the women who help the world of food continue to turn.
By Joanne Lee Molinaro
The blogger and Tiktok chef () takes the stories and passion that made her an internet star and translates them onto the page. Weaving narratives about her family with reimagined takes on traditional Korean dishes, all prepared with exclusively vegan ingredients, Chef Molinaro鈥檚 book is an example of how to incorporate a plant-based diet into your life while still enjoying the meals that bring you comfort. Though this is Chef Molinaro鈥檚 first book, it's a runaway success, shooting to the top of the New York Times' best-sellers list and earning her a James Beard Award鈥嬧.
"Love Korean spices 鈥 but hate eating all that meat?," asks Rose. "This cookbook has been enormously popular in the ICE library, and not just with the Plant-Based crowd."
By Hawa Hassan with Julia Turshen
"'In Bibi鈥檚 Kitchen' is a gorgeous read, and it鈥檚 one of the first books I purchased for the ever-growing Africa section in ICE鈥檚 library," Rose says. "It makes a great introduction to this popular cuisine."
Grandmas, or 鈥渂ibis鈥 from eight different countries have lent their lifetimes of knowledge to Somali Chef Hawa Hassan and food writer Julia Turshen for this James Beard Award-winning collection.
Composed of 75 recipes from various countries touching the Indian Ocean 鈥 including Mozambique, Eritrea, Madagascar, South Africa and more 鈥 this colorful look into the cuisines of Africa highlights the rich union of local produce with the now-ubiquitous spices that made these countries invaluable stops in the international spice trade. Along with the traditional recipes come stories of wars, migrations and colonizations and the grandmothers that used food to nourish the bodies and souls of their loved ones through it all.
By Charlotte Druckman
It鈥檚 been over a decade since journalist Charlotte Druckman set out to document the experiences of women in professional kitchens, but these stories are no less relevant today than they were then. Legendary chefs like Alice Waters and Christina Tosi share their experiences of being women in this traditionally male-dominated industry, and the pressures, egos and stresses that come along with navigating grueling kitchen life, as well as the ever-present social expectations of what it means to be a woman.
"The chef memoir 鈥 one of my favorite types of books to read 鈥 is essentially a hero鈥檚 story, in which a young cook threads his way through a path of thorny obstacles to culinary triumph," Rose says. "With a few exceptions, like Gabrielle Hamilton鈥檚 'Blood, Bones and Butter,' women chefs have been too busy hacking their way through the undergrowth to sit down and write their own story. I鈥檓 waiting for some meaty female chef memoirs to hit the bookstore shelves soon 鈥 in the meantime, this reportage from Charlotte Druckman is a good placeholder."
By Mashama Bailey and John O. Morisano
ICE alumna and James Beard Award-winning Chef Mashama Bailey, along with her business partner John O. Moisano, chronicles the life-changing experience of turning a run-down bus station into one of the country鈥檚 most revered restaurants in this compelling memoir. Bailey and Morisano bring the reader along on the tribulations and triumphs that come with bringing a vision to life, and what they learned about business and biases along the way.
"Before beginning their culinary careers, students need to know what could lie ahead," Rose says. "Books of practical advice 鈥 David Boulud鈥檚 'Letters to a Young Chef,' for instance 鈥 are helpful, but so are accounts from chefs working on the front line, like Jacques P茅pin鈥檚 'The Apprentice,' Marcus Samuelsson鈥檚 'Yes, Chef' 鈥 or this moving story of partners collaborating to make a restaurant work."
By Christina Tosi
When Christina Tosi showed up to help David Chang produce a food safety plan for his much-beloved Momofuku restaurant, it鈥檚 hard to believe either of them knew the incredible dessert empire it would launch. With a foreword from Chang himself, this debut cookbook by Tosi became an instant classic, and the universally beloved recipes it contains make it clear why this two-time James Beard Award-winning pastry chef inspired an entire generation of women bakers to copy Tosi鈥檚 signature Rosie-the-riveter style while hoping too also follow in the footsteps of her meteoric rise.
"This one was really popular with students at the French 国产福利 Institute when I was the librarian there," Rose says. "Doubly so because Tosi, like her fellow Momofuku chef David Chang, was an FCI grad!"
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